Tourism

SeaWorld, Hard Rock plan layoffs at Florida properties

Large-scale layoffs are coming to two Florida brands that specialize in tourism and entertainment: SeaWorld and Hard Rock.

The Seminole Tribe of Florida has notified the state of a mass layoff at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood, where up to 1,527 workers could be affected. Many had been let go early in the coronavirus pandemic; some had been brought back to work in June.

According to the state notice, the resort will extend some of those temporary layoffs through the year. If employees are not brought back by Dec. 31, the layoffs will become permanent.

Seminole Gaming spokesman Gary Bitner said the layoff notice represented a “worst-case scenario” that might not come to fruition.

“The Seminole Hard Rock Hollywood hopes to rehire a number of these team members, as business continues to improve,” he said in a statement. “A majority of the team members at the complex are already back at work.”

Meanwhile, in Orlando, SeaWorld Entertainment last week filed a notice with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission saying it had reached a “plan of termination” for an unnamed number of furloughed employees, meaning those temporary furloughs will become permanent layoffs.

SeaWorld had previously furloughed 90 percent of its workforce in March due to “the sudden and unforeseeable economic impacts of the pandemic,” it wrote in the SEC filing, although it hired some back when its parks reopened in June.

SeaWorld said the company would incur about $2.5 million to $3 million in severance costs due to the layoffs. In a quarterly earnings call last month, the company said attendance at its 12 parks had dropped 96 percent in April, May and June, leading to a net loss of $131 million. Its San Diego park only reopened on a limited basis in late August.

Neither company specified whether the layoffs would impact their Tampa properties – the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, Busch Gardens or Adventure Island.

Other Florida Hard Rock hotels and cafes had previously laid off or furloughed more than 1,000 workers, according to state filings. Bitner said he was unaware of any impending layoffs at the Tampa resort, which reopened for business in May.

“Business in Tampa has been strong,” he said.

This story was originally published September 8, 2020 at 12:56 PM.

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